Example sentences of "[pron] [modal v] be [adv] in [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Could we do that , I 'd be entirely in favour of splitting the Tate .
2 In 1987 , I would be here in rue Trablos again to find that the grass had formed a miniature jungle , that the bushes had become trees that sometimes grew taller than the ruins , small groves and forests of dark , luxuriant foliage moving gently in the hot breeze .
3 Whether I would be unequivocally in favour of the protestors , well I 'll be guided .
4 But they will always know the times when I shall be here in Shrewsbury , and I will see to it that whenever possible they shall have word of my moves between . ’
5 I 'm going back with Celia but I shall be here in time to get your breakfast in the morning . ’
6 Alas I had to refuse as I will be away in Palm Beach on that date .
7 We shall be considering how new styles of relationship might be defined and generated ; relationships which would be more in tune with the increasingly influential changes in philosophy and policy , and which can support , in turn , the development of new professional attitudes and practices .
8 All this adds to the difficulty of bereavement service organizers in reaching out to those who may be most in need of the care that can be offered .
9 She may also be helped to understand that if she is willing to try to spread the love she once gave to one person around to others who may be badly in need of it , she will move into an entirely different dimension emotionally : one that will provide her with new satisfactions and in which she will discover that the lovers of this world are not only those who enjoy a close and exclusive relationship .
10 You may be fully in control in your own home and yet be tormented by feelings of insecurity at work .
11 That way she 'd be more in command of the situation instead of turning up the next morning knowing all eyes were going to be fixed on her .
12 Nor did I dare return until I thought you 'd be safely in bed , and no temptation to me . ’
13 And by that time she would be safely in Boston .
14 Her instructor had given her the name of a boy who was selling a sailboard and who would be here in time for the afternoon race .
15 You will realise that words of comfort like this can solve no problems for her ; they can do no more than bathe the wound she has sustained , but she will be badly in need of something to cling on to and because they are spoken by someone who loves her they may be exactly what she wants to hear when she is trying to reassemble herself and face the future .
16 The opportunities for road racing in Britain are so frequent that you can be constantly in danger of taking on too many .
17 Umbrellas are one dress accessory no one should be without in Britain .
18 We must be nearly in range by now , ’ I said to Jean as I turned back to channel 20 .
19 We 'll be there in America , ’ he boasted last night .
20 There must be more in Cairo under ‘ sequestration ’ .
21 Man-made environments can be extremely rich in species — partly because , like this chestnut coppice , they may be constantly in transition .
22 In spite of this , there has been serious developments and in this year , and they 'll be fully in place next year .
23 I hope they wo n't be worse in quality , although they might be less in quantity .
24 Well having seen Blackburn Rovers away from home a few times this season I I 've got ta say at half time I thought they 'd they 'd be comfortably in control .
25 They will be here in seconds .
26 Previously you could ask someone to type up first draft , second draft , maybe a third draft , but how far can you drive your secretary , and now they can be wholly in charge of this — they can change the layout of it as much as the words within it ; they can ask colleagues to come in and comment and even add a little bit .
27 Previously you could ask someone to type up first draft , second draft , maybe a third draft , but how far can you drive your secretary — and now they can be wholly in charge of this .
28 Pijnenborg et al point out that ‘ many doctors ’ participate in and accept the practice and they claim that the practice has been stable over the years and assume that it may be less in future .
29 She had n't realised that it might be here in Norfolk that the origin of the problem could lie .
30 It 'll be here in minutes , ’ Belinda saw that Faye had begun crying quietly , and that Bill was pressing her hand wordlessly between his two trembling ones .
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